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Key Consumer Issues - Predatory Lending
Predatory Lending: Don't Become a Victim
- Overview
- Types of predatory lending
- Payday loans
- Car title loans
- Predatory mortgage lending
- Tips for avoiding predatory lending
- Your rights and protections
- The loan application process in general-your rights and protections
- Mortgage loans-your rights and protections
- Payday loans-your rights and protections
- Debt collection-your rights and protections
Predatory lending is the practice of lenders targeting vulnerable individuals and convincing them to take loans with incredibly high interest rates and other abusive terms.
Sometimes, the victims of predatory lending may have less than perfect credit, so they can’t get a standard loan. In other cases, they may actually be able to get a standard loan but are misled by the lender or broker into believing they can’t. They are often hardworking people with limited incomes. An extra expense or setback, such as an unexpected medical bill or a car accident, may leave them unable to pay their bills. With their back against the wall, they become perfect targets for predatory lenders.
Some of the most common forms of predatory lending include payday loans, car title loans, and predatory mortgage lending.
Payday Loans A payday loan is a small short-term cash advance until payday. Typically, you write a post-dated check and the lender gives you cash for the amount of the check minus a fee. For example, if you need $500, you might have to write a check for $625. Ideally, when the date on the check arrives, you’d have enough money to cover the check and the lender would deposit it (although you’d still be out the steep $125 fee). In reality, when your next payday comes, very little time has passed and circumstances haven’t changed much. You’re still financially strapped, so you’re forced to extend the loan by paying an additional fee. If you don’t, the lender threatens to deposit your check and file criminal charges when it’s returned for insufficient funds. You literally get trapped in a cycle of high interest loans, on which you’re probably paying triple digit interest rates, and you spiral further into debt.
Keep in mind that each time you have to extend the loan, you’re not getting more money to help you out of your difficult circumstances. You’re paying more money for no additional benefit. In the example above, over a period of just a few weeks, you’ve added $250 in fees and haven’t reduced the original debt at all.
Car Title Loans Car title loans are similar to payday loans. They’re usually short-term (several weeks), for relatively small amounts of money, and require the borrower to pay high fees. The main difference is that the car title is used as collateral for the loan. If you can’t pay the loan back when it’s due, you have to pay more fees to extend it, or you lose your car. To make matters worse, the amount of the car title loan is often a lot less than the car is actually worth.
Predatory Mortgage Lending Predatory mortgage lending involves home equity loans, home improvement loans, and refinancing deals with expensive and oppressive terms. Because homeownership and financing are extremely complicated, predatory mortgage lending practices can be difficult to understand and detect. Often, once people discover they have been a victim, they are embarassed to speak up -- until it's too late. For that reason, and because your home may be at risk, you should always seek advice from someone you trust before signing any loan contracts or other agreements related to your home.
As a starting point, here is a list of some common signs of predatory mortgage lending:
Your Rights & Protections Below are descriptions of some of your rights with respect to various types of loans and different parts of the loan process. These descriptions are not a complete list of your rights; they are only an overview.
The loan application process in general-your rights and protections:
- The Truth in Lending Act says that when you apply for a loan, the lender has to tell you, in writing, both the finance charge and the annual percentage rate before you sign a contract. The finance charge means the total fees and other costs the lender charges you for the loan, not including the amount of the loan itself. It includes things like interest, service charges, origination fees, etc. The annual percentage rate is the average rate of interest you pay on the loan each year. The APR can be much higher than the interest rate if the lender added extra things to your loan.
- You have the right to be considered for credit without regard to your sex, race, marital status, religion, national origin, age, or receipt of public assistance. You cannot be denied credit for any of these reasons.
- Anytime you're denied credit, you have a right to a written explanation.
Mortgage loans-your rights and protections:
The federal Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994 (HOEPA) says that for certain high-rate, high-fee home loans, the lender is required to give you specific written information/warnings about the loan three days before it's finalized. These are called Section 32 disclosures and they must tell you:
- That you have three business days after getting the disclosures to decide not to go through with the loan, even if you've already signed the application
- That if you don't make your payments you could lose your home
- What the annual percentage rate, regular payment and loan amounts are
- That credit insurance premiums are included in your deal (if they are)
- If it's a variable rate loan, the disclosures must tell you that the interest rate and the monthly payment amount could go up and must also tell you what the maximum monthly payment could be.
Georgia’s Fair Lending Act also makes certain home loan practices illegal:
- Financing various types of insurance premiums in the loan
- Charging late fees unless the loan contract specifically allows them
- Charging late fees when the payment is less than 10 days late
- Charging late fees higher than 5% of the amount of the monthly payment
- Charging more than one late fee for a particular payment.
For high cost loans, the Fair Lending Act:
- Makes it illegal for a lender to intentionally "flip" a loan (refinance a home loan made within the last 5 years with a high cost loan that doesn't really benefit you)
- Limits the amount of prepayment penalties that can be charged
- Makes a loan illegal if the principal amount increases over time because your regular payments don't cover the interest charges
- Says a lender can't make a loan they know you can't afford
- Says that if your lender plans to foreclose because you've defaulted on your loan, you have the right to "cure the default" by bringing your payments up to date. The lender must notify you of your right to "cure the default" even after a foreclosure.
If a lender violates the Fair Lending Act, you have the right:
- To sue for damages including actual damages, twice the amount you’ve paid in interest, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees
- To get out of the loan for up to 5 years, if the lender violated certain specific provisions of the law.
Georgia law also says that mortgage lenders and brokers must tell borrowers the fees they will have to pay, how those fees are determined, and under what conditions they may be refunded. These individuals cannot:
- Make false or misleading statements to you
- Allow blank spaces on loan applications
- Make a mortgage loan they plan to foreclose on
Payday loans-your rights and protections
Georgia law makes payday loans that meet certain criteria illegal. In general, loans for $3,000 or less with interest rates higher than 16% are illegal in this state. After May 1, 2004, if someone makes an illegal payday loan to you, you may have the following remedies:
- Cancel the loan without repayment
- Can sue the lender for up to three times the amount of any interest you’ve paid on the loan plus attorney’s fees and court costs.
Debt collection-your rights and protections: Predatory lending often forces vulnerable people into serious debt. If you find yourself struggling with debt or in danger of losing your home or other property, you should know there are laws that protect your rights. For more information on debt collection and your rights, click here.
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